Williams College’s Robert Bell named 2004 Outstanding College Professor

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WILLIAMSTOWN – The Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching and the Council for the Advancement and Support of Education have named Robert Bell "Outstanding Baccalaureate College Professor of the Year." Bell holds the William R. Kenan, Jr. chair at Williams College, awarded to a faculty member "whose enthusiasm for good teaching, breadth of interest and achievement show promise of a creative relationship not only with undergraduates but also with young faculty." Four professors (baccalaureate, community college, doctoral and research university, and master’s college and university) were selected for their outstanding teaching commitment to undergraduate students and influence on teaching. In announcing the awards, Lee S. Shulman, president of the Carnegie Foundation said of them, "Through their contribution to excellence in teaching and extraordinary dedication to their students, they have dignified and elevated the profession of teaching and created a legacy of knowledge and practice that others can build upon." The awards were presented in a ceremony in Washington, D.C. today (Thursday). "All of us at Williams – and so many elsewhere – look to Bob Bell as the vibrant embodiment of all that a great teacher should be, and as a model of professional commitment, personal generosity, and joyful learning" said Stephen Fix, the Robert G. Scott '68 Professor of English at Williams. Bell began teaching at Williams College in 1972, where he teaches courses on Jane Austen and George Eliot, Shakespeare, and James Joyce, as well as general courses on poetry, the history of the novel, and English literature. "In my teaching I strive to demonstrate the efficacy and pleasure of generous attention to literature," says Bell, "to encourage disciplined, imaginative responses to language and to give pure, sustained attention to the students' reading and writing." In 1994, he was named an Exemplary Teacher by the American Association of Higher Education, the same year he founded the Project for Effective Teaching at Williams, a mentoring program for new faculty, which he continues to direct. The project brings young faculty members together for weekly discussions, symposia, and conferences on the challenges and opportunities of teaching. Ronadh Cox, associate professor of geosciences, describes Bell as "a fantastic professor, who has made a huge difference not only in the lives of his undergraduate students but in the lives of his junior faculty colleagues. I've never met anybody quite like him, and consider myself lucky to have had his mentorship while I was an assistant professor." "Teaching is part art, part technique, and part personality and character," Bell says. "Yet teachers can also learn better how to proceed, how to evaluate their own effectiveness, how to make changes, how to become more dynamic lecturers – and perhaps more charismatic listeners: what other teachers do to reach and move undergraduates." His teaching has earned numerous awards, including the national Robert Foster Cherry Award for Great Teachers in 1998. Bell's former student Heather Brubaker '03 says, "His invocation at the end of every class, 'I'll be in my office! Come see me, I love to hang out!' is famous both for its sincerity and its rate of return. It is an indication of the passion and skill with which he draws intellectual engagement out of the classroom and ties the bonds of continued exchange throughout the college community. I have never felt more intellectually necessary to a classroom and a community." He is the author of "Critical Essays on Kingsley Amis" and the forthcoming "Reader's Guide to David Foster Wallace's 'Infinite Jest'." His book "Jocoserious Joyce: The Fate of Folly in 'Ulysses'" was describe as "Magical … original, incisive, and enlightening criticism, a fresh approach to 'Ulysses' that analyses the levels and depths of its humor in a language that is consciously witty." Bell is a remarkably productive scholar whose work has earned him a wide and appreciative audience. He has contributed to the American Scholar, Modern Language Quarterly, English Literary History, and the Milton Quarterly, among others. He is a frequent presenter at academic conferences and has served as editor-in-chief of the Berkshire Review and edited "Notes and Annotation to Joyce's Hades Episode." He was host of The Book Show, syndicated by Northeast Public Radio (1996 to 1998), and has published and broadcast scores of humor pieces. Born in 1946, Bell was raised in Belmont and Cambridge, Massachusetts. He graduated magna cum laude from Dartmouth College and received his Ph.D. from Harvard University, where he was awarded a Danforth Foundation Fellowship for exceptional promise in college teaching, 1967-1972. The U.S. Professors of the Year program, created in 1981, is the only national initiative specifically designed to recognize excellence in undergraduate teaching and mentoring. This year’s winners were selected from a pool of nearly 300 nominees. The Council on the Advancement and Support of Education (CASE) assembled two preliminary judging panels earlier this year that evaluated the nominees in four areas: 1) impact on and involvement with undergraduate students; 2) scholarly approach to teaching and learning; 3) contributions to undergraduate education within the institution and community; and 4) support from colleagues and students. CASE then forwarded a list of finalists to the Carnegie Foundation, which performed the final round of judging and awards the $5,000 prize to each national winner.
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Pittsfield Council Reviews Public Safety Budget, Keeps SpotShotter

By Brittany PolitoiBerkshires Staff

PITTSFIELD, Mass. — On the fourth day of budget deliberations, the City Council preliminarily approved public safety and public service budgets. 

See the first two days of budget review here; and the third day here.

Councilors deliberated the Pittsfield Police Department's $16,439,421 spending plan for more than 90 minutes. Ward 1 Councilor Kenneth Warren unsuccessfully motioned to cut $220,000 for ShotSpotter services. 

He said the acoustic gunshot detection technology is not well used throughout the country, citing other communities that have opted out or are exploring it. 

Pittsfield has two more years on its contract; while councilors voted down the budget reduction several were willing to explore the impact data and see if those funds could be used elsewhere. 

Police Chief Marc Maddalena reported that there has been a significant decrease in shots fired calls, and attributed it to the surveillance technology assisting enforcement. He said it also comes in faster than 911 calls. 

"If people know that just by that noise alone that we're responding within seconds, that's preventing them from utilizing that weapon," he said. 

"So that in of itself is saving lives." 

It has an about 20 percent accuracy rate, and police respond to every activation. 

On Sunday, at least two homes in the area of Memorial Drive and Doyle Drive were struck by gunfire and investigators located 17 shell casings on scene. This was brought up during conversation; it was reported that there were 13 impulses on ShotSpotter during the incident. 

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